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This study analyses the role of life satisfaction for the intention of migrants to return to their country of origin. It is argued that the utility function of return migration is a function of life satisfaction gains and losses due to migration. Using the German Socio-Economic Panel and the World Value Survey, first-generation migrants from 26 countries were studied on the country level and within ...
In:
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
47 (2021), 1, 110-129
| Maximilian Schiele
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In:
ifo DICE Report
17 (2019), 4, 41-44
| Felicitas Schikora
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This study investigates how precarious employment throughout the life course affects the fertility behavior of men and women in Germany, and how risk attitudes moderate exposure to objectively given uncertainty. Analyzing data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study from 1990 to 2015, I find that men and women have become quite similar in their fertility behavior: Stable employment accelerates ...
In:
Advances in Life Course Research
47 (2021), 100402
| Christian Schmitt
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Diese Dissertation umfasst vier eigenständige Kapitel, die jeweils einen eigenen Beitrag zur ökonomischen Literatur der frühkindlichen Bildung und Betreuung, sozialer Normen und Erwerbsentscheidungen von Frauen leisten. Soziale Normen gelten als zentrale Erklärung für die sich ändernde Erwerbsbeteiligung von Frauen. Kapitel 2 dieser Dissertation untersucht die intergenerationale Transmission dieser ...
2019,
| Sophia Schmitz
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Many studies have found that married people have higher subjective well-being than those who are not married. Yet the increase in cohabitation raises questions as to whether only marriage has beneficial effects. In this study, we examine differences in subjective well-being between cohabiting and married men and women in midlife, comparing the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, and Norway. We apply ...
In:
Demography
56 (2019), 4, 1219-1246
| Brienna Perelli-Harris, Stefanie Hoherz, Trude Lappegård, Ann Evans
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Research on the relationship between vegetarianism and subjective well-being (SWB) has produced inconsistent results, which may partly be due to small sample sizes and divergent operationalizations of well-being. For these reasons, the present study aimed to thoroughly examine this association in two large representative samples from Germany (Study 1: N = 12,905, including 665 vegetarians) and Australia ...
In:
Food Quality and Preference
86 (2020), 104018
| Tamara M. Pfeiler, Boris Egloff
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As many developed countries enact policies that allow children to begin universal childcare earlier, understanding how starting universal childcare earlier affects children’s cognitive and noncognitive skills is an important policy question. We provide comprehensive evidence on the multidimensional short- and longer-run effects of starting universal childcare earlier using a fuzzy discontinuity in ...
In:
Demography
57 (2020), 1, 61-98
| Daniel Kuehnle, Michael Oberfichtner
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In many countries and contexts, survey researchers are facing decreasing response rates and increasing survey costs. Data collection is even more complex and expensive when rare or hard-to-reach populations are to be sampled and surveyed. In such cases alternative sampling and recruiting approaches are usually needed, including non-probability and online convenience sampling. A rather novel approach ...
In:
Survey Methods: Insights from the Field
(2020),
| Simon Kühne, Zaza Zindel
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Are parent-couples with equal income more satisfied as their children grow up, than those who prioritize the father’s career (specialize)? For the first time, 384 German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study couples were categorized into life-course coupled earnings types, by tracing how earnings were divided within couples between the ages of 1 to 15 of their youngest child. Multivariate, multilevel analysis ...
In:
Work, Employment and Society
36 (2022), 1, 80-100
| Laura Langner
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This article aims to take stock of the various manifestations of on-call work in Germany. It is shown that formal on-call work is, by international standards, relatively strictly regulated in Germany, not least as the result of a 2019 reform of the law. Similar to other countries, however, other informal variants are used that lie outside the scope of the re-regulation or ‘normalisation’ of formal ...
In:
Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research
26 (2020), 4, 447-463
| Karen Jaehrling, Thorsten Kalina